Thursday, November 14, 2013

Explain in depth the factors that encouraged European exploration.i need long answer(12-15 sentences) im using "World History" text book, and i...

Two important developments provided incentives for
European exploration. First ,Europe's population grew significantly in the fifteenth
century. The Black Death had devastated Europe's population in the mid-fourteenth
century, but, 150 years later, Europe's population had rebounded. The expanding
population meant increasing land values, a general increase of prosperity, and an
expansion of commerce. Growing trade led to advances in shipbuilding and navigation,
which made long sea voyages more feasible. The search for new goods and markets provided
a powerful impetus to exploration. Second, with the rise of nation-states, European
monarchs had the power, wealth, and desire to sponsor explorations that would develop
trade and further enrich them and their countries.Moreover, Muslim control over the
trade routes to the east resulted in rising prices of eastern goods. At the same time,
however, the Islamic world was not a significant sea power.Portugal and Spain, which had
struggled for a long time against Muslims in the Mediterranean, had incentives to seek
trade routes by sea to the east. Further, long and bitter wars with the Moors had
contributed to religious fervor among the Iberians. Christopher Columbus, for example,
recited vespers every evening, led his crew in religious observances,and (although he
never took monastic vows) sometimes wore the habit of a Franciscan
monk.

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